Kokoda Trail closed to tourists
Posted Wednesday, February 06, 2008, 6:38 PM by Lonely Planet
Papua New Guinea's historic Kokoda Trail has been closed to tourists until a dispute over a proposed copper mine is resolved, Australian media is reporting.
Local Koiari landowners have felled a tree across the track near the village of Naoro, 55km from Port Moresby. Villagers say they will stop travellers who try to pass until the PNG government allows the Australian company Frontier Resources to dig up 600m of the track to mine a $US5.9 billion copper and gold deposit.
The Koiari people have been offered a 5% stake in the mine that could deliver them more than $US100 million over the proposed 10-year life of the mine.
Australia, who is seeking a world heritage listing for the trail, is lobbying the PNG Government to kill the mine project in favour of the tourism dollar.
About 5000 tourists travel walk the 96km Kokoda Trail each year. One of the world's great treks, it links the southern and northern coast of PNG, and was the scene of bitter fighting between Australian soldiers and Japanese troops in 1942.
Labels: Asia and Pacific, Breaking travel news, Trekking


2 Comments:
I don't want to come across anal, but as I understand it, the name should always be 'Kokoda Track' and never 'Kokoda Trail'.
You are spot on. The word 'track 'was officially recognised in 1957 by the Battles Nomenclature Committee as the British Commonwealth Battle Honour.
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